{"title":"How to Clean Stainless Steel Appliances (Streak-Free Finish)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/lifestyle/how-to-clean-stainless-steel-appliances","category":{"slug":"lifestyle","name":"Lifestyle"},"creator":{"name":"Clean That Up","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1GLDECMH83KqDn6hypodYw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KbYRM-ZA2dA"},"tldr":"Get your stainless steel fridge, oven, and dishwasher streak-free with dish soap and two microfiber towels. No special chemicals, no sticky oil hacks.","totalDurationSeconds":358,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Microfiber cloths (2-3)","Spray bottle","Soft kitchen towel","Non-scratch scrub sponge"],"materials":["Mild dish soap","Water","White vinegar","Bar Keepers Friend Soft Cleanser"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Find the grain direction","text":"Stainless steel has a grain, just like wood. On some appliances it runs horizontally, on others it runs vertically. Get up close and look for the faint parallel lines in the brushed finish. You want to clean with the grain, not across it.If you wipe against the grain you'll push grime sideways into the brush lines, leave streaks, and sometimes create tiny scratches that catch the light forever. Two seconds of looking saves an hour of frustration later."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Mix water and dish soap in a spray bottle","text":"Grab any clean spray bottle and fill it with plain water. Add three or four drops of regular dish soap - Dawn, Method, whatever you already have at the sink. Give it a gentle swirl. You don't need bubbles, just a slight cloudiness.Dish soap is the right call for two reasons. It cuts through the oily fingerprint residue that's actually causing the smudges, and it's gentle enough that it won't strip or dull the stainless finish over time."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Tighten the nozzle to a fine mist","text":"Most spray bottles have a twist nozzle that goes from a hard stream to a fine mist. Spin it as tight as it goes. You want the spray to land on the surface as tiny droplets that stay put, not a wet jet that runs down the door.If the cleaner runs, it leaves watermark trails that you'll have to chase down on the next pass. A fine mist puts a thin, even film exactly where you need it and nowhere else."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Spray and wipe with the grain using a damp microfiber","text":"Mist the cleaner across one panel at a time. Don't drench it. Take a damp microfiber towel and wipe across the whole panel in long, even strokes - always in the same direction as the grain you identified in step one.Use a fresh section of the towel as it picks up grime. Move from top to bottom so any drips land on areas you haven't cleaned yet. One panel, then the next. The smudges and fingerprints lift off without much pressure at all."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Buff dry with a clean microfiber","text":"This is the step most people skip, and it's the one that takes you from clean to mirror-shiny. Grab a second microfiber - this one bone dry - and buff the panel you just wiped. Same direction as the grain.Buffing pulls up the last of the soapy moisture and any residue you couldn't see. The surface dries instantly with no streaks, no spots, no haze. That's the secret. One damp, one dry, every single time."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Skip the hacks that ruin stainless steel","text":"You'll see plenty of videos online telling you to polish stainless with olive oil, baby oil, or Orange Glow. Don't. They make the surface shiny for about ten minutes, then they get sticky, attract more dirt, and build up a film that's miserable to remove later.Two other things will permanently damage the finish: steel wool and those green-and-yellow scrub pads, which scratch every time, and bleach, which discolors stainless and ruins it for good. If you've been using any of these, stop now.If your appliances have a fingerprint-resistant or black stainless coating, also skip anything abrasive in step seven - that coating is a thin layer that comes right off."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: For hard water spots or rust, use vinegar or Bar Keepers Friend","text":"Stainless steel can still pick up hard water spots and surface rust over time. For light water staining, soak a microfiber in plain white vinegar and wipe with the grain. For anything stubborn, reach for Bar Keepers Friend Soft Cleanser - the liquid version in the squeeze bottle, not the powder.Squirt a small amount onto a non-scratch scrub sponge, work it in along the grain with light pressure, then rinse with the damp microfiber and buff dry. Always test on a small hidden patch first to make sure the finish reacts well. Powder versions are too aggressive for this job."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-31T00:03:14.160Z","published":"2026-05-31T00:01:39.943Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}